Official statement
Other statements from this video 38 ▾
- 1:07 Is Google automatically switching back to mobile-first after fixing asymmetry errors?
- 1:07 Is it true that mobile-first indexing is stuck: how long until automatic unlocking?
- 3:14 Does Google flag missing images on mobile: Should you ignore these alerts if your mobile version is intentionally different?
- 3:14 Should you really fix the missing images detected by Google on mobile?
- 4:15 Does mobile-first indexing really improve your ranking on Google?
- 4:15 Does mobile-first indexing really impact your page rankings?
- 5:17 How does Google blend site-level and page-level signals to rank your pages?
- 5:49 Should you prioritize domain authority or optimize page by page?
- 11:16 Does functional duplicate content really harm your SEO ranking?
- 11:52 Is Google really ignoring duplicate boilerplate content without punishment?
- 13:08 Do you really need multiple questions in an FAQ schema to get a rich snippet?
- 13:08 Should you really abandon the FAQ schema on single-question product pages?
- 14:14 Does schema markup really help you land featured snippets?
- 15:45 Do featured snippets really depend on structured markup or visible content?
- 18:18 Is Google penalizing CSS-hidden FAQ content in an accordion?
- 18:41 Does the FAQ schema really work if answers are hidden in a CSS accordion?
- 19:13 Should you merge two cannibalizing pages or let them coexist?
- 19:53 Is it really necessary to merge your competing pages to boost their rankings?
- 20:58 Can you really combine canonical and noindex without risking your SEO?
- 21:36 Can you really combine canonical and noindex without risk?
- 23:02 Does the exact order of keywords in your content really affect your Google ranking?
- 23:22 Does the order of keywords on a page really impact Google rankings?
- 27:07 Does the order of keywords in the meta description really affect CTR?
- 29:56 Does Google really understand your synonyms better than you do?
- 30:29 Should you really stuff your pages with synonyms to rank on Google?
- 31:56 Should you create mixed pages to cover all meanings of a polysemous keyword?
- 34:00 Should you create specialized pages or general pages to rank effectively?
- 35:45 Should you optimize your site for synonyms, or does Google really handle it all by itself?
- 37:52 Does Google really give a 6-month notice before any major SEO changes?
- 39:55 Does Google really announce its major algorithm changes 6 months in advance?
- 43:57 Why are multilingual footer links crucial on every page?
- 44:37 Why do your hreflang links fail when they point to a homepage instead of an equivalent page?
- 44:37 Why does linking to the homepage undermine your hreflang strategy?
- 46:54 Subdomains or Subdirectories for Internationalization: Which Hreflang Architecture Does Google Really Favor?
- 47:44 Should you opt for subdirectories or subdomains for a multilingual site?
- 48:49 Should you add footer links to your multilingual homepages in addition to hreflang?
- 50:23 Does your shared IP really harm your SEO rankings?
- 50:53 Can shared cloud IPs really harm your SEO?
Mueller states that the order of keywords in the meta description does not directly influence rankings, but it can increase CTR if the snippet becomes more appealing. Google suggests testing different variations via Google Ads to identify which one generates the best click-through rate. Note: the snippet may be algorithmically rewritten, making any manual optimization potentially irrelevant.
What you need to understand
What is the connection between the meta description and ranking?
The meta description has not been a direct ranking factor for years — Google has confirmed this repeatedly. What Mueller clarifies here is that the order of terms in this tag has no impact on the ranking algorithm itself. There is no magical SEO boost if you write 'buy running shoes' instead of 'running shoes buy'.
However, the indirect impact through CTR deserves attention. If your snippet matches exactly what the user is looking for, they will click more. And yes, CTR remains a behavioral signal that Google observes — even if its exact weight remains unclear. A better CTR can signal that your result meets the search intent better, which may influence positioning in the medium term.
Why does Google recommend testing via Google Ads?
The suggestion to use Google Ads to test meta descriptions is pragmatic. Ads campaigns allow for quick comparison of multiple ad variations on the same queries, with reliable and statistically significant CTR data. You identify which formulation works best, then apply it on the SEO side.
However — and this is where it gets tricky — the advertising context differs from the organic context. Intent may be different, positioning as well, not to mention that Google rewrites your organic snippets about 60 to 70% of the time. Testing via Ads gives hints, not certainties that can be transferred 100%.
What does 'algorithmically generated snippet' actually mean?
Google no longer just takes your meta description. It rewrites it based on the query, user context, and page content. Sometimes it extracts a passage from the body text. Sometimes it combines multiple elements. The result: your optimized meta description may simply never display.
This is frustrating, but it's the reality. Google favors what it believes to be the most relevant snippet for each specific query. So even if you write a perfect meta description with the exact order of keywords, there is no guarantee that Google will use it. This renders any micro-optimization on the order of terms even more questionable.
- The meta description is not a direct ranking criterion, the order of words makes no difference to the algorithmic ranking.
- The impact goes through CTR: a more attractive snippet can increase the click-through rate, a behavioral signal that may be taken into account.
- Google rewrites snippets in 60-70% of cases, making any manual optimization random.
- Testing via Google Ads provides hints about effective formulations, but the organic context differs.
- Prioritizing clarity and relevance remains more effective than fine-tuning the exact order of keywords.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this recommendation really consistent with field observations?
Let's be honest: testing meta descriptions via Google Ads to transpose them into SEO sounds appealing on paper but is shaky in practice. Ads appear in a commercial context, often with a marked transactional intent. The CTR is boosted by the premium position, the 'Ad' label, and direct competition on the screen. Transposing these results into organic search, where the intent may be informational and the position variable, is approximate.
Moreover, organic CTR data in Search Console already exists. Why not A/B test meta descriptions directly in SEO and compare performances over equivalent periods? It is longer, certainly, but infinitely more reliable. [To be verified]: Mueller does not specify why to favor Ads over Search Console — is it for convenience, or because Google prefers to direct towards its advertising network?
In what cases does this word order optimization really make sense?
If you operate on ultra-specific, low-volume queries, where every click counts and where Google actually displays your meta description, aligning the word order can create a slight CTR gain. Typically: highly targeted technical long-tail queries, sharp B2B niches, ultra-targeted local queries. In these contexts, the snippet is rarely rewritten, and the user scans the text word for word.
On the other hand, for generic or competitive queries, it's a waste of time. Google rewrites massively, users scan visually rather than read, and the attractiveness of the snippet depends much more on the overall message than on the exact order of terms. It’s better to invest this time in the quality of the actual page content, which directly influences ranking and generates featured snippets (featured snippets, people also ask, etc.).
What are the unspoken limits of this statement?
Mueller remains very vague about the real weight of CTR as a ranking signal. We know that Google observes it, but its exact impact? Unclear. Is it a direct, indirect, or contextual signal? No numerical data. This renders any optimization based on CTR hypothetical. You can boost your CTR by 20% without seeing your position budge an inch — or vice versa.
Another point: Google says nothing about the lifespan of a high-performing meta description. If you identify a formulation that works via Ads, how long will it remain effective before Google rewrites it? How long before competitors copy your approach and dilute your advantage? These practical questions remain unanswered. [To be verified]: this recommendation feels more like a comfortable generic advice than actionable and measurable guidance.
Practical impact and recommendations
What concrete steps should you implement on your SEO projects?
First step: audit the actual display of your meta descriptions in the SERPs. Use Search Console to identify the pages where Google displays your tag versus those where it rewrites the snippet. Focus your optimization efforts only on pages where the meta description is actually displayed — the rest is a waste of time.
Then, if you want to test the order of keywords, do it under real conditions: modify the meta description, wait a few weeks, and compare CTR before/after in Search Console. No need to go through Google Ads to obtain reliable data. Compare over equivalent periods (same seasonality, same search volume) to avoid biases.
What mistakes should be absolutely avoided in this approach?
Do not fall into compulsive micro-tinkering of the word order. It's time-consuming, the impact is uncertain, and you risk neglecting much more powerful levers: content quality, Hn structure, internal linking, user experience. The order of terms in the meta description is a second-order detail.
A second classic mistake: writing keyword-stuffed meta descriptions to 'match' the query. Result: robotic snippets, unattractive, that harm your CTR instead of improving it. Prioritize clarity, click incentives, and value promise. A well-written 'natural' snippet almost always outperforms a snippet stuffed with keywords in the 'right' order.
How to measure the actual effectiveness of your optimizations?
Use Search Console as the sole reference to measure organic CTR. Segment by page, by query, and compare before/after modification. If you are testing multiple variants, ensure you have sufficient click volume for the results to be statistically significant — below 100-200 clicks per period, variations may be noise.
Finally, cross-check CTR data with conversion data (via GA4 or your analytics tool). A high CTR is meaningless if the traffic does not convert. Sometimes, a very catchy snippet attracts off-target visitors, which can degrade your bounce rate and potentially harm your SEO. The goal is not to maximize CTR at all costs, but to attract the right traffic.
- Auditing the actual display of your meta descriptions via Search Console before any optimization.
- Testing variants under real organic conditions, not just via Google Ads.
- Prioritizing clarity and value promise over the exact order of keywords.
- Measuring CTR before/after modification over comparable periods and with sufficient volume.
- Cross-checking CTR and conversion rates to ensure you attract the right traffic.
- Avoid keyword stuffing in snippets — attractiveness trumps keyword density.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
L'ordre des mots dans la meta description influence-t-il le classement Google ?
Google affiche-t-il toujours la meta description que je rédige ?
Tester les meta descriptions via Google Ads est-il vraiment pertinent pour le SEO ?
Quel volume de clics faut-il pour que les tests de CTR soient significatifs ?
Faut-il privilégier le CTR ou le taux de conversion dans l'optimisation des snippets ?
🎥 From the same video 38
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 52 min · published on 14/05/2020
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